1, forget it as soon as possible, and don't let it affect your psychology.
2. Take necessary preventive measures.
There are many kinds of premonitions, but not many belong to the sixth sense officer. If you imagine it out of thin air, the probability of this kind of thing happening will not be very high, just like buying lottery tickets. I have a hunch that the probability of belonging to the sixth sense officer will be higher. At present, no scientist can accurately explain the scientific truth, but most of the explanations are related to electromagnetic waves. In today's era of electromagnetic waves, electromagnetic waves have affected our sixth sense officer, so there are often some phenomena similar to the sixth sense officer, which usually do not need to be considered.
It should be noted that the premonitions that animals other than human beings can show are usually not premonitions or sixth senses, but clear information within their perception range, such as natural disasters, which are usually felt through earth sound, earth light, infrasound and ultrasonic waves.
Because everyone's sensory range is different, occasionally someone will hear ultrasonic waves or infrasound waves that others have never heard of, or see images that others have never seen. This is a normal phenomenon and does not need to be associated with a hunch.
I will do some experiments to analyze my premonition of people, which is accurate and approved by you. The following contents are for reference. Don't drown your life with rules.
Question 1: Have you thought about how you would feel before you were born?
When people think like this, if you are not stimulated by external things to sleep at that time, your brain will let you see places where you have never seen yourself in your dreams, and the image will not be blurred.
Question 2: When your relatives make you have rich feelings for him or spend most of your life together, most people will have a hunch about them, which will cause two kinds, one is disaster and the other is blessing. Usually happy things are things that few people will feel before, and most people will automatically choose the unhappy side as their own hunch to realize. This hunch is just an example of things, which is different from reality, but it is definitely the same price.
Question 3: When people hug a big tree, they will feel safe and comfortable. This is the power of nature.
Finally, let's sort out the process of solving life for you: when you are not an adult, until you are an adult, you will be stuck on both sides by your index finger, because you want to think about something yourself, and these things are not the thinking or new problems you choose to think about. I won't answer this question casually. People who know should know why I didn't answer.
With the analysis of time, the composition of time and space has a great influence. How many people choose their destiny ...? Details: I don't think it is the happiest! "sixth sense"
With the rapid development of science and technology and the deepening of physiological research, people's understanding of themselves is becoming clearer and clearer.
Scientific experiments show that the human body not only has five basic senses, such as sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, but also has a hunch about the future of the body. Physiologists call this feeling "body perception" and "body fuzzy perception", also known as the sixth sense of human body. In foreign countries, human mind or telepathy is called human sixth sense, also known as extrasensory ability (ESP in English).
The "sixth sense" of human body refers to the feeling of human internal organs, which is produced by the stimulation of various metabolic activities in the body to internal receptors. For example, people feel hunger and thirst not through the five basic sensory organs, but through the "sixth sense".
The perception of the "sixth sense" has no specific sensory organs. It is produced by the activities of various internal organs of the body, and the signals are transmitted to nerve centers at all levels in time through nerve impulses sent by neurons (nerve endings) attached to the organ walls.
The higher nerve center of human visceral receptors is located in hypothalamus and has corresponding representative areas in cerebral cortex. However, the feeling of internal organs is generally not as clear as the body surface, with vague nature and lack of accurate positioning. For example, when there is abdominal pain, patients often can't tell whether it is stomach pain or abdominal pain. Therefore, physiologists call the "sixth sense" of human body "body fuzzy perception".
In general, people can't clearly feel the peristalsis of the gastrointestinal tract, the secretion of digestive juice, the beating of the heart and so on. Physiologists' experiments show that the discovery of the "sixth sense" of human body is beneficial for human beings to know their own activities and prevent and treat diseases when their internal receptors are stimulated strongly or continuously.
Canadian psychologist Ronald? Ren Xinke recently reported in the journal Psychology that he found through experiments that some people may realize that the scene they are watching has changed, but they are not sure what this change is. He thinks this may be a newly discovered and conscious visual mode. He named this phenomenon "thinking vision". Ren Xinke said: "It may be an early warning system." "Spiritual intuition" may not work alone, but it may work with other senses.
Aristotle, an ancient Greek scientist and philosopher, thought long ago that,
People have five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. However, many people in life believe that "intuition" or "sixth sense" still exists, especially women. Does the "sixth sense" exist or not? Scientists have not been able to give us a definite answer so far.
Flash the sixth sense in the experiment
The sixth sense has always been a controversial topic. Some people believe in the existence of the "sixth sense", while others think it is nonsense. Canadian psychologist Ronald? A recent experiment conducted by Ren Xinke may add some notes to the debate about the "sixth sense".
Ronald? In Ren Xinke's experiment, the subjects were asked to watch a series of images flashed on the computer screen, and each image stayed on the screen for about? Seconds, and then replaced by a short blank gray screen. Forty subjects were divided into two groups, in which the images watched by the "experimental group" were slightly different, while the images watched by the "control group" were exactly the same. The results showed that there were 12 people in the "experimental group", and 82 testers in 504 tests reported that they had already felt that the image had changed before confirming what had changed. In the "control group", the same people are sure that nothing has changed. The reactions of the two experiments are really different.
Ren Xinke analyzed that our visual system can produce a strong sense of depth and can detect that something has changed. Even if it is difficult for our intelligence to visualize this change, we can't tell what has changed or where it has changed. Therefore, Ren Xinke proposed that "people who believe in the existence of the sixth sense can find many explanations from this phenomenon". Although he can't explain how "spiritual intuition" is produced in physics at present, he thinks that it can be confirmed by brain scanning technology.
The sixth sense is unconscious cognition?
Dan, a visual researcher at the University of Illinois, USA? Simmons believes that Ren Xinke's discovery "may mark the existence of an unknown and interesting' attention mechanism'", and Ren Xinke's research has taken an important first step in distinguishing accurate feelings from blind beliefs. Another cognitive neuroscientist, who asked not to be named, thinks that Ren Xinke's research method is very strange and the result is worth discussing. However, according to the usual psychological research methods to examine the results, we can find that the results obtained by Ren Xinke seem to be of little significance, because according to the general laws of statistical analysis, the results are not universal enough to become scientific conclusions.
Professor Han, head of the psychology department in Peking University, said in an interview: "I have changed, but I don't know where I have changed." This feeling can be explained from the perspective of consciousness. After people receive information from the outside world, the brain processes the information. Some information can reach the level of consciousness, others can't, but sometimes the latter often changes people's behavior. Ren Xinke's research results can also be explained by cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. However, for psychological research, the "sixth sense" is a bit like UFO and aliens. There is no direct evidence to prove its existence, but quite a few people believe it exists.
The explanation of cognitive psychology
Psychology originated from western philosophy in ancient Greece. After more than two thousand years' development, it has become a science to study behavior and psychological process. In the late 1950s, with the rapid development of computer science and information science, especially the formation of artificial intelligence, it became a trend to transform the development of traditional psychology with the concept of information processing. Cognitive psychology was formally formed in 1960s, and became a main research direction of western psychology in 1970s. Cognitive psychology regards people as an information processing system, and holds that cognition is information processing, which is an internal representation obtained in the decision-making and selection of internal and external stimuli, including the whole process of transforming, simplifying, processing, storing and using sensory input. According to this view, cognition can be decomposed into a series of stages, each stage is a unit that performs a certain operation on the input information, and the reaction is the product of this series of stages and operations. All components of an information processing system are interrelated in some way.
Suppose a person looks at the letter E projected on the screen. If the projection time is short, such as one millisecond, then this person can't see anything, which means that perception is not instantaneous. If the projection time is longer, such as five milliseconds, then this person will see something, but he doesn't know what it is, which means that perception has been produced, but discrimination has not yet been produced; If the projection time is long enough for people to see that the letters are not O or Q, but E, F or K, then this person has partial discrimination. This may explain why in Ren Xinke's experiment, the subjects can intuitively feel that the images they saw before and after have changed, and the "sixth sense" may be an incomplete cognition.
The explanation of cognitive neurology
Modern physiology and biotechnology, especially brain imaging technology, are combined with new theories, technologies and psychology of neuroscience, resulting in cognitive neuroscience, which can display psychological processes with brain metabolic function imaging.
Cognitive neuroscience has found that each feeling has its own neural channels. For example, the visual cortex of the back of the head is involved in the processing of visual information. Using brain imaging technology, we can see the morphological changes of the brain after visual stimulation and see the responses of different parts of the brain under different stimuli.
In the mid-1980s, a psychologist named Navon used PET technology (positron emission tomography, which can measure the local cerebral metabolic rate, cerebral blood flow and glucose absorption rate) to conduct a visual study: how the brain handles global perception and local perception. His method is to let experimenters identify large H and S patterns composed of small H and S, and it turns out that it takes less time to identify large letters than small letters. As a result, the theory of "overall priority" came into being, that is to say, people always have an overall understanding of things before they realize the local characteristics. Later, some experts used fMRI (functional magnetic vibration, paramagnetic measurement of arterial blood flow through oxygenated hemoglobin) to study the same problem and reached the same conclusion. However, it should be recognized that the current brain metabolic function imaging can not realize real-time imaging or fast tracking of rapid cognitive activities, only tens of seconds of data can be integrated through integral measurement to form a clear image, and the final result can only be obtained after some processing and analysis.
However, if we use physiological function imaging methods with good time resolution, such as evoked brain electrical activity (EP) combined with computer-controlled tomography (CT) to observe the human brain's response to the stimulation of multiple objects with complex shapes, scientists have found that when people can confirm that they feel the observed objects at 100 ms, the electrical activity of the cerebral cortex to deal with the whole perception is weak, while the electrical activity to deal with the local perception is strong, which is the opposite at 200 ms. This does not seem to conform to the theory of "overall priority". However, due to the poor spatial resolution of physiological function imaging, it is difficult for scientists to accurately distinguish the regions of brain response.
It can be seen that only by combining brain metabolism function with physiological imaging function can better results be obtained in both spatial and temporal resolution. In fact, in the application of various brain cognitive imaging techniques, in order to compare the relationship between images obtained by various methods, it is necessary to carry out various proportional stereo transformations, which are not only based on anatomical landmarks, but also need linear or nonlinear transformations with various brain data parameters, which is extremely difficult in technology. "sixth sense"
With the rapid development of science and technology and the deepening of physiological research, people's understanding of themselves is becoming clearer and clearer.
Scientific experiments show that the human body not only has five basic senses, such as sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, but also has a hunch about the future of the body. Physiologists call this feeling "body perception" and "body fuzzy perception", also known as the sixth sense of human body. In foreign countries, human mind or telepathy is called human sixth sense, also known as extrasensory ability (ESP in English).
The "sixth sense" of human body refers to the feeling of human internal organs, which is produced by the stimulation of various metabolic activities in the body to internal receptors. For example, people feel hunger and thirst not through the five basic sensory organs, but through the "sixth sense".
The perception of the "sixth sense" has no specific sensory organs. It is produced by the activities of various internal organs of the body, and the signals are transmitted to nerve centers at all levels in time through nerve impulses sent by neurons (nerve endings) attached to the organ walls.
The higher nerve center of human visceral receptors is located in hypothalamus and has corresponding representative areas in cerebral cortex. However, the feeling of internal organs is generally not as clear as the body surface, with vague nature and lack of accurate positioning. For example, when there is abdominal pain, patients often can't tell whether it is stomach pain or abdominal pain. Therefore, physiologists call the "sixth sense" of human body "body fuzzy perception".
In general, people can't clearly feel the peristalsis of the gastrointestinal tract, the secretion of digestive juice, the beating of the heart and so on. Physiologists' experiments show that the discovery of the "sixth sense" of human body is beneficial for human beings to know their own activities and prevent and treat diseases when their internal receptors are stimulated strongly or continuously.
Canadian psychologist Ronald? Ren Xinke recently reported in the journal Psychology that he found through experiments that some people may realize that the scene they are watching has changed, but they are not sure what this change is. He thinks this may be a newly discovered and conscious visual mode. He named this phenomenon "thinking vision". Ren Xinke said: "It may be an early warning system." "Spiritual intuition" may not work alone, but it may work with other senses.
Aristotle, an ancient Greek scientist and philosopher, thought long ago that,
People have five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. However, many people in life believe that "intuition" or "sixth sense" still exists, especially women. Does the "sixth sense" exist or not? Scientists have not been able to give us a definite answer so far.
Flash the sixth sense in the experiment
The sixth sense has always been a controversial topic. Some people believe in the existence of the "sixth sense", while others think it is nonsense. Canadian psychologist Ronald? A recent experiment conducted by Ren Xinke may add some notes to the debate about the "sixth sense".
Ronald? In Ren Xinke's experiment, the subjects were asked to watch a series of images flashed on the computer screen, and each image stayed on the screen for about? Seconds, and then replaced by a short blank gray screen. Forty subjects were divided into two groups, in which the images watched by the "experimental group" were slightly different, while the images watched by the "control group" were exactly the same. The results showed that there were 12 people in the "experimental group", and 82 testers in 504 tests reported that they had already felt that the image had changed before confirming what had changed. In the "control group", the same people are sure that nothing has changed. The reactions of the two experiments are really different.
Ren Xinke analyzed that our visual system can produce a strong sense of depth and can detect that something has changed. Even if it is difficult for our intelligence to visualize this change, we can't tell what has changed or where it has changed. Therefore, Ren Xinke proposed that "people who believe in the existence of the sixth sense can find many explanations from this phenomenon". Although he can't explain how "spiritual intuition" is produced in physics at present, he thinks that it can be confirmed by brain scanning technology.
The sixth sense is unconscious cognition?
Dan, a visual researcher at the University of Illinois, USA? Simmons believes that Ren Xinke's discovery "may mark the existence of an unknown and interesting' attention mechanism'", and Ren Xinke's research has taken an important first step in distinguishing accurate feelings from blind beliefs. Another cognitive neuroscientist, who asked not to be named, thinks that Ren Xinke's research method is very strange and the result is worth discussing. However, according to the usual psychological research methods to examine the results, we can find that the results obtained by Ren Xinke seem to be of little significance, because according to the general laws of statistical analysis, the results are not universal enough to become scientific conclusions.
Professor Han, head of the psychology department in Peking University, said in an interview: "I have changed, but I don't know where I have changed." This feeling can be explained from the perspective of consciousness. After people receive information from the outside world, the brain processes the information. Some information can reach the level of consciousness, others can't, but sometimes the latter often changes people's behavior. Ren Xinke's research results can also be explained by cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. However, for psychological research, the "sixth sense" is a bit like UFO and aliens. There is no direct evidence to prove its existence, but quite a few people believe it exists.
The explanation of cognitive psychology
Psychology originated from western philosophy in ancient Greece. After more than two thousand years' development, it has become a science to study behavior and psychological process. In the late 1950s, with the rapid development of computer science and information science, especially the formation of artificial intelligence, it became a trend to transform the development of traditional psychology with the concept of information processing. Cognitive psychology was formally formed in 1960s, and became a main research direction of western psychology in 1970s. Cognitive psychology regards people as an information processing system, and holds that cognition is information processing, which is an internal representation obtained in the decision-making and selection of internal and external stimuli, including the whole process of transforming, simplifying, processing, storing and using sensory input. According to this view, cognition can be decomposed into a series of stages, each stage is a unit that performs a certain operation on the input information, and the reaction is the product of this series of stages and operations. All components of an information processing system are interrelated in some way.
Suppose a person looks at the letter E projected on the screen. If the projection time is short, such as one millisecond, then this person can't see anything, which means that perception is not instantaneous. If the projection time is longer, such as five milliseconds, then this person will see something, but he doesn't know what it is, which means that perception has been produced, but discrimination has not yet been produced; If the projection time is long enough for people to see that the letters are not O or Q, but E, F or K, then this person has partial discrimination. This may explain why in Ren Xinke's experiment, the subjects can intuitively feel that the images they saw before and after have changed, and the "sixth sense" may be an incomplete cognition.
The explanation of cognitive neurology
Modern physiology and biotechnology, especially brain imaging technology, are combined with new theories, technologies and psychology of neuroscience, resulting in cognitive neuroscience, which can display psychological processes with brain metabolic function imaging.
Cognitive neuroscience has found that each feeling has its own neural channels. For example, the visual cortex of the back of the head is involved in the processing of visual information. Using brain imaging technology, we can see the morphological changes of the brain after visual stimulation and see the responses of different parts of the brain under different stimuli.
In the mid-1980s, a psychologist named Navon used PET technology (positron emission tomography, which can measure the local cerebral metabolic rate, cerebral blood flow and glucose absorption rate) to conduct a visual study: how the brain handles global perception and local perception. His method is to let experimenters identify large H and S patterns composed of small H and S, and it turns out that it takes less time to identify large letters than small letters. As a result, the theory of "overall priority" came into being, that is to say, people always have an overall understanding of things before they realize the local characteristics. Later, some experts used fMRI (functional magnetic vibration, paramagnetic measurement of arterial blood flow through oxygenated hemoglobin) to study the same problem and reached the same conclusion. However, it should be recognized that the current brain metabolic function imaging can not realize real-time imaging or fast tracking of rapid cognitive activities, only tens of seconds of data can be integrated through integral measurement to form a clear image, and the final result can only be obtained after some processing and analysis.
However, if we use physiological function imaging methods with good time resolution, such as evoked brain electrical activity (EP) combined with computer-controlled tomography (CT) to observe the human brain's response to the stimulation of multiple objects with complex shapes, scientists have found that when people can confirm that they feel the observed objects at 100 ms, the electrical activity of the cerebral cortex to deal with the whole perception is weak, while the electrical activity to deal with the local perception is strong, which is the opposite at 200 ms. This does not seem to conform to the theory of "overall priority". However, due to the poor spatial resolution of physiological function imaging, it is difficult for scientists to accurately distinguish the regions of brain response.
It can be seen that only by combining brain metabolism function with physiological imaging function can better results be obtained in both spatial and temporal resolution. In fact, in the application of various brain cognitive imaging techniques, in order to compare the relationship between images obtained by various methods, it is necessary to carry out various proportional stereo transformations, which are not only based on anatomical landmarks, but also need linear or nonlinear transformations with various brain data parameters, which is extremely difficult in technology. "sixth sense"
With the rapid development of science and technology and the deepening of physiological research, people's understanding of themselves is becoming more and more clear.
Scientific experiments show that the human body not only has five basic senses, such as sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, but also has a hunch about the future of the body. Physiologists call this feeling "body perception" and "body fuzzy perception", also known as the sixth sense of human body. In foreign countries, human mind or telepathy is called human sixth sense, also known as extrasensory ability (ESP in English).
The "sixth sense" of human body refers to the feeling of human internal organs, which is produced by the stimulation of various metabolic activities in the body to internal receptors. For example, people feel hunger and thirst not through the five basic sensory organs, but through the "sixth sense".
The perception of the "sixth sense" has no specific sensory organs. It is produced by the activities of various internal organs of the body, and the signals are transmitted to nerve centers at all levels in time through nerve impulses sent by neurons (nerve endings) attached to the organ walls.
The higher nerve center of human visceral receptors is located in hypothalamus and has corresponding representative areas in cerebral cortex. However, the feeling of internal organs is generally not as clear as the body surface, with vague nature and lack of accurate positioning. For example, when there is abdominal pain, patients often can't tell whether it is stomach pain or abdominal pain. Therefore, physiologists call the "sixth sense" of human body "body fuzzy perception".
In general, people can't clearly feel the peristalsis of the gastrointestinal tract, the secretion of digestive juice, the beating of the heart and so on. Physiologists' experiments show that the discovery of the "sixth sense" of human body is beneficial for human beings to know their own activities and prevent and treat diseases when their internal receptors are stimulated strongly or continuously.
Canadian psychologist Ronald? Ren Xinke recently reported in the journal Psychology that he found through experiments that some people may realize that the scene they are watching has changed, but they are not sure what this change is. He thinks this may be a newly discovered and conscious visual mode. He named this phenomenon "thinking vision". Ren Xinke said: "It may be an early warning system." "Spiritual intuition" may not work alone, but it may work with other senses.
Aristotle, an ancient Greek scientist and philosopher, thought long ago that,
People have five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch. However, many people in life believe that "intuition" or "sixth sense" still exists, especially women. Does the "sixth sense" exist or not? Scientists have not been able to give us a definite answer so far.
Flash the sixth sense in the experiment
The sixth sense has always been a controversial topic. Some people believe in the existence of the "sixth sense", while others think it is nonsense. Canadian psychologist Ronald? A recent experiment conducted by Ren Xinke may add some notes to the debate about the "sixth sense".
Ronald? In Ren Xinke's experiment, the subjects were asked to watch a series of images flashed on the computer screen, and each image stayed on the screen for about? Seconds, and then replaced by a short blank gray screen. Forty subjects were divided into two groups, in which the images watched by the "experimental group" were slightly different, while the images watched by the "control group" were exactly the same. The results showed that there were 12 people in the "experimental group", and 82 testers in 504 tests reported that they had already felt that the image had changed before confirming what had changed. In the "control group", the same people are sure that nothing has changed. The reactions of the two experiments are really different.
Ren Xinke analyzed that our visual system can produce a strong sense of depth and can detect that something has changed. Even if it is difficult for our intelligence to visualize this change, we can't tell what has changed or where it has changed. Therefore, Ren Xinke proposed that "people who believe in the existence of the sixth sense can find many explanations from this phenomenon". Although he can't explain how "spiritual intuition" is produced in physics at present, he thinks that it can be confirmed by brain scanning technology.
The sixth sense is unconscious cognition?
Dan, a visual researcher at the University of Illinois, USA? Simmons believes that Ren Xinke's discovery "may mark the existence of an unknown and interesting' attention mechanism'", and Ren Xinke's research has taken an important first step in distinguishing accurate feelings from blind beliefs. Another cognitive neuroscientist, who asked not to be named, thinks that Ren Xinke's research method is very strange and the result is worth discussing. However, according to the usual psychological research methods to examine the results, we can find that the results obtained by Ren Xinke seem to be of little significance, because according to the general law of statistical analysis, the results are not universal enough to become scientific conclusions.
Professor Han, head of the psychology department in Peking University, said in an interview: "I have changed, but I don't know where I have changed." This feeling can be explained from the perspective of consciousness. After people receive information from the outside world, the brain processes the information. Some information can reach the level of consciousness, others can't, but sometimes the latter often changes people's behavior. Ren Xinke's research results can also be explained by cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. However, for psychological research, the "sixth sense" is a bit like UFO and aliens. There is no direct evidence to prove its existence, but quite a few people believe it exists.
The explanation of cognitive psychology
Psychology originated from western philosophy in ancient Greece. After more than two thousand years' development, it has become a science to study behavior and psychological process. In the late 1950s, with the rapid development of computer science and information science, especially the formation of artificial intelligence, it became a trend to transform the development of traditional psychology with the concept of information processing. Cognitive psychology was formally formed in 1960s, and became a main research direction of western psychology in 1970s. Cognitive psychology regards people as an information processing system, and holds that cognition is information processing, which is an internal representation obtained in the decision-making and selection of internal and external stimuli, including the whole process of transforming, simplifying, processing, storing and using sensory input. According to this view, cognition can be decomposed into a series of stages, each stage is a unit that performs a certain operation on the input information, and the reaction is the product of this series of stages and operations. All components of an information processing system are interrelated in some way.